Hugo Livestream Saturday

I just can't seem to stay off of podcasts lately. This Saturday, August 1 at 3:00 PM EDT, I'll be joining the Superversive SF team for another live hangout. The topic this time will of course be the upcoming Hugo Awards. Should be a rousing conversation. Keep checking the link…
Drunken Zombie Had Me Back for Some Reason

Drunken Zombie Had Me Back for Some Reason

I went on the Drunken Zombie podcast again last night to talk about horror movies, general geekery, and my writing. The DZ crew were kind enough to let me plug Nethereal and Sci Phi Journal. So I owe them a debt of thanks once again. For those of you who are unfamiliar…

Between Light and Shadow: The Works of Gene Wolfe

Author Marc Aramini has taken up the herculean task of analyzing each and every story by Gene Wolfe--who is himself the greatest living author, period Volume one of BETWEEN LIGHT AND SHADOW is available now.

Transhuman and Subhuman Part XIV: Childhood’s End and Gnosticism

Continuing from the previous post, we now consider the Gnostic foundations of Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke as demonstrated by John C. Wright. "I say CHILDHOOD’ S END is ‘Gnostic’, a heresy of the Christians," Wright explains, "because I do not see the attitude or mind-set of any other religion…
The Advent of Somewhither

The Advent of Somewhither

John C. Wright's latest novel is here! What is the whimsically titled Somewhither about? The long answer is that SOMEWHITHER will be in the same category as THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE but if, instead of being a good fairy tale and well written children’s book, the author was an…
Reviewer Praise for Nethereal

Reviewer Praise for Nethereal

The Millennial King was recently kind enough to devote an in-depth review to my book. In a delightful twist of form I've never seen before, he wrote his post as if he were a theater critic reviewing an opera based on Nethereal (which is appropriate, considering it's a space opera). Overall,…

Transhuman and Subhuman Part XII: The Big Three of Science Fiction

The twelfth essay in Transhuman and Subhuman by John C. Wright corrects the popular misconception that the third member of the Big Three Campbellian authors, alongside Isaac Asimov and Robert Heinlein, wasn't Arthur C. Clarke or Ray Bradbury, but A.E. van Vogt. Wright points out that neither Clarke nor Bradbury were…
Transhuman and Subhuman Part X:The Golden Compass Points in No Direction

Transhuman and Subhuman Part X:The Golden Compass Points in No Direction

John C. Wright's criticism of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy hinges not on the books' atheist message (Wright was an atheist himself when he first read, and found serious defects in, the series), but on the sloppy and arbitrary handling of their plot. "This book should have been an atheist…